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Author Topic: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis  (Read 7439 times)

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Offline ServusInutilisDomini

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Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
« Reply #105 on: November 05, 2022, 07:40:05 AM »
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  • Honestly, I don't think any of this will happen.  When the time comes, as per the prophecy of Blessed Anna Maria Taigi, Sts. Peter and Paul will designate / point out the Holy Pope after the chastisement, and then the Three Days of Darkness (during which all the Church's enemies will be wiped out).  Even if you don't believe this one, the Holy Pope will be made clear after the chastisement begins, so I don't think there will be any kind of "peaceful" resolution to this Crisis like a conversion of Bergoglio.

    To me, the entire heretic Pope question is irrelevant and a red herring.

    Only question that matters to us personally is whether the Conciliar Church is the Catholic Church or an imposter Anti-Church.  As to who's the pope, who isn't, whether he's a full pope or no pope or partial pope, blackmailed pope, drugged pope, imposter pope, while it's OK to debate for academic reasons, it doesn't matter.  Had V2, NOM, etc. never happened, and it was a question of Bergoglio spouting heresy in TV interview or preaching during Mass, we'd all be like "That's not my problem.  Let the Cardinals deal with him."  But this is no ordinary "heretic pope" scenario.  This is about whether THE CHURCH can "defect" in her Magisterium and Public Worship.  Answer of course is absit, of course not.  It's related to the "heretic pope" question only to the extent that it's one possible explanation for how all this happened.  But when Bellarmine and Cajetan and John of St. Thomas were debating the issue, what they had in mind was NOT the Conciliar Church situation, but that of an ordinary pope who becomes a heretic as a private person.  That the Catholic Magisterium could teach error, promulgate a Protestant Rite of Mass, etc. ... they would all agree that this is not possible, and blasphemous to assert that it could happen.  They would all agree on that point and condemn as heresy any suggestion to the contrary.

    When the Holy Pope has been raised up by God, there will no longer be any doubt, as the entire world will recognize and accept him.  There won't be this Bergoglio vs. Vigano scenario or anything like it.  Bergolgio has only a few years left in him.  If Bergolgio were to convert, why would these other Cardinals elect Vigano?
    Agreed.

    Have you noticed that the Dimonds avoid the heretical Pope line of argumentation and focus on the bigger picture while the rest seem to want to dive deep into Bellarmine, etc.?

    Online 2Vermont

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #106 on: November 05, 2022, 08:12:28 AM »
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  • No, you are wrong.  Read it.  The word "we" does not mean someone else.

    Also, an angel from heaven is an authority.  So someone claiming to have authority who doesn't preach the same gospel is a liar and has no authority in the Church whatsoever.  Obviously, one has to avoid rash or ill-informed judgments so it is a specious argument to frame such a judgment in terms of "Aunt Helen" deciding on a whim that the pope is a heretic.  Does Bishop Sanborn have the authority to judge that Bergoglio has merely the material designation and not the papacy formaliter?  Do you?  If Aunt Helen studied theology informally under seminary professors for 8 years, does she get to make judgments?  If not, then what good is the traditional movement as a whole?  Maybe we should all be in the local novus ordo parish singing "Eagles Wings" and "cuмbaya"?  No, we have the authority to make reasonable judgments.  Just because someone puts up a "Catholic Church" sign in front of their building in our neighborhood doesn't mean we are required to believe them.  St Hypatius rejected Nestorius immediately without any input from authorities.  He was later commended by the pope.
    Yes, I asked that question about that verse as well.  Paul said "We"...although he does mean others as well.  

    I'm not quite sure why "Aunt Helen" was even brought up with respect to that verse given every single one of us on this site are making private, individual judgments about Bergoglio.


    Offline Hardicanute

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #107 on: November 05, 2022, 08:53:01 AM »
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  • If there were a Holy Pope that was accepted by all as legitimate, and then he taught that BoD must be believed by Catholics, then I would believe in it.  Period.  We can't play this game of "if I disagree with something he teaches, then I simply declare him a heretic non-pope and cling to my belief anyways".  That kind of mentality is in fact an insight into the problem with Totalism.  There's nothing, no principle, to establish a priori the legitimacy of a pope.  Lots of Catholics before VI did not agree with papal infallibility (including some Irish catechisms that rejected the notion).  But when the Church defined it, they (the Catholics) changed their mind and accepted it with the certainty of faith ... wheres the Old Catholics left the Church for schism and heresy.

    While R&R has the problem of Magisterium-Sifting that it permits in principle, Totalism labors under the problem of Pope-Sifting.

    Excellent comment. 

    Conservative Novus Ordo individuals entertain that Traditionalists have done the same with Vatican II and the post-Conciliar reforms.

    This is where the matter is different than Vatican I. Vatican II defined nothing. The post-Conciliar reforms defined nothing (with the possible exceptions of the new canonizations and John Paul II’s Ordinatio sacerdotalis which was already part of the OUM). 

    Therefore there are no dogmatic facts, aside from the new canonizations, that are connected with accepting the Vatican II pontiffs.

    There are, however, reversals and changes of prior definitively settled magisterial teachings which makes the acceptance of Vatican II and its teachings impossible as well as those who promulgated and ratified it. Nor is it a matter of bad willed interpretations on the part of liberals and heretics. The post-conciliar authorities have themselves interpreted the docuмents in heterodoxy. Not only that, they have also used Vatican II as the foundation to legitimize all of their heresies and impious attempts at changing the Roman Catholic religion.

    So the two are not analogous and Traditionalists are not necessarily akin to the Old Catholics.

    I do agree, also, that Totalism and R&R are problematic in their very principles. Pope sifting and magisterium sifting is unacceptable for a Catholic. The only challenge, in fairness, that I would pose to myself, as a Guerardian, would be the accusation of “de-formalizing” a Pope tryst I don’t agree with which roughly corresponds with the aforementioned. That, I currently, do not have an answer to.
    euntes ergo docete omnes gentes baptizantes eos in nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti docentes eos servare omnia quaecuмque mandavi vobis et ecce ego vobiscuм sum omnibus diebus usque ad consummationem saeculi.

    -Evangelium Secundum Matthaeum

    Offline Hardicanute

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #108 on: November 05, 2022, 09:00:49 AM »
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  • Look at it from the perspective of an adult potential convert.  He isn't being compelled to convert by ecclesiastical authority.  He has to hear the truth about salvation and be convinced.  Once he has accepted the truth of the Holy Trinity, Jesus Christ, true God and true man, our Lord and Savior  and the Catholic Church being the one true Church of Christ, he must then be baptized before he comes under the ecclesiastical authority of the pope and the bishops.  Even when you move to a new city, the bishop doesn't suddenly show up at your home to tell you where the local Catholic Church is.  Even if he did, you still have to be able to identify that he is in fact the bishop.  So even at the lowest levels, you have to make some judgments on your own.  Most people never bother to study theology enough to understand all the details of our Faith.  They just do whatever their priest tells them to do.  That used to be enough to stay out of trouble.

    Yes, but at which point does the adult convert simply give in to authority? Roman Catholicism’s paradigm is not that of Protestantism; we can’t be in a perpetual state of individual freedom to judge what is right and wrong doctrine. The religion does not operate this way. It is authoritative and hierarchical by its very nature. Hence the anathemas, excommunications, inquisitions, and crusades against the heretics who thought they had the right doctrines and the Roman See was wrong.

    The number of magisterial docuмents which touch on this point are overwhelming and unanimous; in the thousands in fact. Pope Leo XIII famously wrote: “Similarly, it is to give proof of a submission which is far from sincere to set up some kind of opposition between one Pontiff and another. Those who, faced with two differing directives, reject the present one to hold to the past, are not giving proof of obedience to the authority which has the right and duty to guide them; and in some ways they resemble those who, on receiving a condemnation, would wish to appeal to a future council, or to a Pope who is better informed.”

    At some point the individual needs to yield their own opinion to the authority of the Holy See and submit with complete docility and humility.

    What is the system which articulates the principles for exceptions? This is what we need to answer as Traditionalists in face of the current crisis or we risk being forced into a similar position as the Old Catholics.

    I will attempt to articulate my views on this matter in another thread.
    euntes ergo docete omnes gentes baptizantes eos in nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti docentes eos servare omnia quaecuмque mandavi vobis et ecce ego vobiscuм sum omnibus diebus usque ad consummationem saeculi.

    -Evangelium Secundum Matthaeum

    Offline MiracleOfTheSun

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #109 on: November 05, 2022, 01:01:43 PM »
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  • To me, the entire heretic Pope question is irrelevant and a red herring.

    Only question that matters to us personally is whether the Conciliar Church is the Catholic Church or an imposter Anti-Church... Had V2, NOM, etc. never happened, and it was a question of Bergoglio spouting heresy in TV interview or preaching during Mass, we'd all be like "That's not my problem.  Let the Cardinals deal with him." ... This is about whether THE CHURCH can "defect" in her Magisterium and Public Worship.  Answer of course is absit, of course not.  

    Exactly.  It's not as if these 'popes' bumped their heads in the sacristy, somehow misunderstood the dogma of the Immaculate Conception and printed up some odd deviation in a booklet.  These 'canonized saints' have all enforced a false religion on unsuspecting and unknowledgeable laymen while passing it off as the Catholic religion.  


    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #110 on: November 06, 2022, 05:45:51 AM »
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  • At some point the individual needs to yield their own opinion to the authority of the Holy See and submit with complete docility and humility.


    Hardicanute,

    At what point? I've asked this question of Lad, and brought it up before:


    Quote
    More empty rhetoric that becomes absurd in application to real events. 

    When John XXXIII was elected, was he "the Magisterium"? That was 1959. What did the "motives of credibility" say, or would they say? Nothing at the time said he wasn't of "the Magisterium." Submission to his authority was required.

    When Paul VI was elected, 
    was he "the Magisterium"? That was 1963. What did the "motives of credibility" say, or would they say? Nothing at the time said he wasn't of "the Magisterium." Submission to his authority was required.

    At some point a magisterial act was weighed, or you weigh it in hindsight in rejecting either John XXXIII or Paul VI. Maybe a certain act of the Vatican II Council, maybe the promulgation or establishment of the New Mass. Point being, at some point a Magisterium that had all the marks of "credibility" - demanding submission - made a decision or act that you and other Catholics judged: a specific Magisterial act that was weighed and questioned.

    Perhaps it was several magisterial acts. In any event, you and we all weighed certain magisterial acts and effectively pronounced "anti-gospel." For some that meant also therefore "not pope"; for others, simply a magisterial act not to be believed or followed. 

    The point being, again, for you, as well as Stubborn, I, for everyone here, some papal, magisterial act or acts - which under your standard should be accepted, believed, and obeyed - was rejected. Then, for some, the magisterium itself was rejected. But not until acts from a magisterium that had all the "motives of credibillity" violated the teachings of Scripture or Tradition. 

    Why the Neo-SSPX position on the Crisis is untenable - page 5 - Anσnymσus Posts Allowed - Catholic Info (cathinfo.com)





    Quote
    As you say, these are "monumentally difficult questions," and we need to think through them and parse the claims out so to speak. 


    We are talking specifically about a teaching regarding indefectibility which posits that a pope and the bishops in union with him cannot teach error Magisterially. Period. That teaching is belied by the Conciliar Church.

    The CE article speaks in your terms, but doesn't address the issue of any Magisterial teaching being incapable of error, which, again, is the focus from my end.

    So, I do not think you have dealt with this objection:



    Quote

    Quote
    Of course, I understand the "totally off the rails" - I think that's one of Lad's phrases - distinction that is trying to be made. In effect, that is simply saying a "pope" and the "magisterium" have become extremely erroneous, very, very badly erroneous. Either way, it's a claim of error by what constitutes the magisterium of the Church. However, my I think critical point remains: the error(s) come from a body that, under the traditional thinking, could not commit it. A body that we are told cannot commit error and we are bound to listen to. To simply say, when this body goes "totally off the rails," it's not THE BODY, is an evasion of the issues and the crux of the problem. 



    Before the "errors," was John XXIII, Paul VI etc. pope of an indefectible Church or not? 

    And, where is the "governing body" of this indefectible Church which cannot lose its governing body?

    Is the Catholic Magisterium Infallible? - page 3 - Crisis in the Church - Catholic Info (cathinfo.com)




    Quote
    Of course, I understand the "totally off the rails" - I think that's one of Lad's phrases - distinction that is trying to be made. In effect, that is simply saying a "pope" and the "magisterium" have become extremely erroneous, very, very badly erroneous. Either way, it's a claim of error by what constitutes the magisterium of the Church. However, my I think critical point remains: the error(s) come from a body that, under the traditional thinking, could not commit it. A body that we are told cannot commit error and we are bound to listen to. To simply say, when this body goes "totally off the rails," it's not THE BODY, is an evasion of the issues and the crux of the problem. 

    Paul VI was elected pope in June of 1963. When did the "motives of credibility" apply in accepting his papacy? July of 1963? January of 1964? Why the delay? Are the "motives of credibility" to be suspended for 6 months, a year, two years? Is he a pope whose official Magisterial acts are to be accepted upon his election and acceptance? If not, when are they to be? 


    I know you see my point: the prerogatives of indefectible teaching and the necessity of submission fell upon Paul VI at some point before the "errors." The subsequent errors make false the claim the pope's universal magisterium is free from error. Those "errors" occurred at some point after the "motives of credibility" would have said he was pope, and thus from that point the errors would impossible per the traditional - or let's say in vogue - teaching prior to V2. 

    Thank you for the dialogue. 

    Is the Catholic Magisterium Infallible? - page 3 - Crisis in the Church - Catholic Info (cathinfo.com)



    Judging from the way you conduct yourself here, I trust I will get a direct and courteous response from you, and that we at least can have a real, substantive and civil discussion. 

    DR

    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline de Lugo

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #111 on: November 06, 2022, 07:16:14 AM »
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  • If there were a Holy Pope that was accepted by all as legitimate, and then he taught that BoD must be believed by Catholics, then I would believe in it.  

    Purely theoretical, since a priori those who reject BoD would preclude ever considering any pope who taught it as legitimate.
    Noblesse oblige.

    Offline ServusInutilisDomini

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #112 on: November 06, 2022, 07:47:27 AM »
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  • Purely theoretical, since a priori those who reject BoD would preclude ever considering any pope who taught it as legitimate.
    Ladislaus who rejects BoD just stated he would accept a Pope who taught it as legitimate and you respond by saying people like that don't exist.


    Offline Hardicanute

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #113 on: November 06, 2022, 01:45:18 PM »
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  • Hardicanute,

    At what point? I've asked this question of Lad, and brought it up before:








    Before the "errors," was John XXIII, Paul VI etc. pope of an indefectible Church or not?

    And, where is the "governing body" of this indefectible Church which cannot lose its governing body?

    Is the Catholic Magisterium Infallible? - page 3 - Crisis in the Church - Catholic Info (cathinfo.com)







    Judging from the way you conduct yourself here, I trust I will get a direct and courteous response from you, and that we at least can have a real, substantive and civil discussion.

    DR


    Hi again, DecemRationes.

    I’m afraid that I do not have an answer at this time. It’s a complex epistemological inquiry which is perplexing and difficult to adequately answer in light of the Vatican II era.
    euntes ergo docete omnes gentes baptizantes eos in nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti docentes eos servare omnia quaecuмque mandavi vobis et ecce ego vobiscuм sum omnibus diebus usque ad consummationem saeculi.

    -Evangelium Secundum Matthaeum

    Online 2Vermont

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #114 on: November 06, 2022, 02:19:07 PM »
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  • I just want to make it clear that, despite my unwillingness to take this position this late in the game, I do not consider it heresy nor do I consider those who adhere to it as heretics.  I know that there was such talk months ago and I found it quite unfortunate.  We're both Catholic.

    Online Ladislaus

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #115 on: November 06, 2022, 02:41:33 PM »
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  • Purely theoretical, since a priori those who reject BoD would preclude ever considering any pope who taught it as legitimate.

    As Servus just pointed out, I clearly said the opposite.  If there were a Pope that was universally accepted as such, if that Pope then proceeded to teach authoritatively to the Universal Church that BoD must be believed by Catholics, then I would believe in BoD.  We don't play this game of, as soon as I disagree with a Pope's teaching, I simply declare the Pope to be a non-pope (it's one of the issues I have with Totalism -- where it's at least implied that this is acceptable).  Not a few Catholics disagreed with papal infallibility before it was defined, but then most of them changed their minds after the Council (the rest became Old Catholic schismatics / heretics).

    Now, this does not mean that if a Pope opined on the matter, gave an allocution, etc. or even just mentioned it in passing, that I would feel bound to agree.  I would then respectfully continue to disagree.  I mean where he taught that it is binding on Catholics to believe, say, at least in an Encyclical.  But even if he opined in its favor, that would not preclude him from being a legitimate pope either.  Then if he taught it authoritatively as binding on all Catholics, then I would change my opinion and accept that teaching.  I don't believe that any such thing will happen but that, if anything, the forthcoming Holy Pope will either condemn it, or at the very least, put severe restrictions on how/when it might be in play.


    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #116 on: November 06, 2022, 03:40:17 PM »
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  • Hi again, DecemRationes.

    I’m afraid that I do not have an answer at this time. It’s a complex epistemological inquiry which is perplexing and difficult to adequately answer in light of the Vatican II era.

    I understand. I haven't heard a credible answer yet. 
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline ServusInutilisDomini

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #117 on: November 07, 2022, 01:40:29 AM »
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  • Hardicanute,

    At what point? I've asked this question of Lad, and brought it up before:








    Before the "errors," was John XXIII, Paul VI etc. pope of an indefectible Church or not?

    And, where is the "governing body" of this indefectible Church which cannot lose its governing body?

    Is the Catholic Magisterium Infallible? - page 3 - Crisis in the Church - Catholic Info (cathinfo.com)







    Judging from the way you conduct yourself here, I trust I will get a direct and courteous response from you, and that we at least can have a real, substantive and civil discussion.

    DR

    The answer would be that a supposed magisterial act was judged not to be magisterial, which differs with rejecting a magisterial act.

    Someone could even judge future supposed magisterial acts as fake based on prior evidence he witnessed. For example, a cardinal at the 1958 conclave or one of the agents involved in interfering with the election would know that the election was invalid and could dismiss all acts of the antipope.

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #118 on: November 07, 2022, 06:34:31 AM »
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  • The answer would be that a supposed magisterial act was judged not to be magisterial, which differs with rejecting a magisterial act.


    Hi, Servus. I don't see how that's any answer at all. That's exactly the issue under discussion, the "judgment" that rejects magisterial acts as effectively "non-magisterial," i.e., not having magisterial authority despite coming from the authority, specifically the Magisterium. The rejection of the acts as non-magisterial (by, to use the quote from Hardicanute, a subordinate who "needs to yield their own opinion to the authority of the Holy See and submit with complete docility and humility") is a given being addressed.



    Quote
    Someone could even judge future supposed magisterial acts as fake based on prior evidence he witnessed. For example, a cardinal at the 1958 conclave or one of the agents involved in interfering with the election would know that the election was invalid and could dismiss all acts of the antipope.

    Ok. Name a cardinal who witnessed what happened at the 1958 conclave who dismissed the acts of John XXIII as an antipope. As far as I know, all the cardinals at the conclave accepted John XXIII's authority. Who didn't? Same as to Paul VI - what cardinal who might have witnessed the 1963 conclave rejected Paul VI's magisterial acts?

    And certainly the mass of people whom we are talking about, Trads below the level of cardinal, didn't "personally witness" anything at those conclaves anyway.

    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline ServusInutilisDomini

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    Re: Encyclopedia of the Cassiciacuм Thesis
    « Reply #119 on: November 07, 2022, 10:34:14 AM »
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  • Hi, Servus. I don't see how that's any answer at all. That's exactly the issue under discussion, the "judgment" that rejects magisterial acts as effectively "non-magisterial," i.e., not having magisterial authority despite coming from the authority, specifically the Magisterium. The rejection of the acts as non-magisterial (by, to use the quote from Hardicanute, a subordinate who "needs to yield their own opinion to the authority of the Holy See and submit with complete docility and humility") is a given being addressed.

    If Pope Michael pronounced a dogma, on what basis would you reject a solemn definition from the Magisterium?

    Ok. Name a cardinal who witnessed what happened at the 1958 conclave who dismissed the acts of John XXIII as an antipope. As far as I know, all the cardinals at the conclave accepted John XXIII's authority. Who didn't? Same as to Paul VI - what cardinal who might have witnessed the 1963 conclave rejected Paul VI's magisterial acts?

    And certainly the mass of people whom we are talking about, Trads below the level of cardinal, didn't "personally witness" anything at those conclaves anyway.
    Irrelevant. You ignored the point. Would such a person be justified in rejecting the anti-popes acts after he knew his election to be invalid and therefore wouldn't need to evaluate any magisterial act? Yes or no.